You probably remember the Apple Maps memes that exploded
across the Internet when the app was first released as part of iOS6 in
September 2012. They were legion: Columbus discovered America because he was
looking for India on Apple Maps. Luke Skywalker turned off his targeting
computer while attacking the Death Star because it was using Apple Maps. Heard
who the Apple Maps development team was? The cast of Lost.

Well, now it looks like Apple is having the last laugh. The
Google Maps mobile apps, on both iOS and Android, were used by 81 million
people in September 2012. By September 2013, according to ComScore, that number
had fallen to 58.7 million. In just one year, Apple Maps has gained 35 million
regular users.

The numbers are worse if you look at the iPhone alone, where
the aforementioned 35 million Apple Maps users stack up against just 6 million
Google Maps users. And a third of those are using the Google Maps app because
they haven't or can't upgrade to iOS 6 or 7, according to an analysis by The
Guardian.

Yes, you read that right: Apple Maps, for all its history of
glitches, errors, broken freeways and missing transit directions, is being used
about six times more than Google Maps wherever users have a choice between the
two.

ComScore's numbers may seem hard to reconcile with the fact
that the Google Maps app was downloaded more than 10 million times when it made
its triumphant return to the App store at the end of 2012. But it seems
millions of those downloads are sitting idle somewhere far from iPhone users'
home screens.

No doubt a big chunk of that Apple Maps usage is down to the
fact that iOS pushes you towards Apple Maps every chance it gets. Anywhere you
ask Siri to take you, you'll be directed within Apple Maps. If you use Yelp,
you're an Apple Maps user by default. Unless you'd like to select that
restaurant's address, copy it, open Google Maps and paste it? Didn't think so.

At the same time, Apple Maps got a major overhaul in iOS 7.
It's a lot cleaner, simpler, and does a few smart things that Google Maps
doesn't, such as automatically darkening the screen for nighttime driving
directions. Personally, I like the fact that Apple Maps shows the time you'll
arrive by default (it's a couple of extra taps on Google Maps); I've also been
a little irked that Google seems to keep changing the route on me, even when
I've specifically and deliberately selected the slowest (and most scenic) of
three route options.

For Google Maps, however, the news is likely to get worse.
Mavericks, the latest upgrade to Mac OS X, features Apple Maps on the desktop
for the first time. Apple has added a feature that lets you send an address or
directions directly to your iPhone, much as Google Maps does with Android
phones. Apple has also bought Embark and HopStop, makers of transit apps. That
should address — hopefully soon — one of the biggest problems with the app for
millions of straphangers.

The lesson here is that you can't ever predict the failure of a product from how much the tech cognoscenti are joking about it. (After all, they all laughed at Twitter, which was just a place to post about what you had for breakfast, and the iPad, which was simply a large iPhone). You have to think outside the bubble.

On the same day that Apple announced the availability of its
much-anticipated Retina iPad mini, NVIDIA and its U.S. partner EVGA unveiled
its own 7-inch Android tablet called the EVGA Tegra Note 7.

Equipped with a Tegra 4 quad-core processor, a 1280x800
display, micro HDMI to connect to HD televisions, 16GB of storage and a
5-megapixel camera (along with a front-facing webcam), the $199 device offers a
strong Android tablet alternative to the pricier Nexus 7 and Galaxy Note 8.

EVGA claims that the device has the world’s first HDR camera
in a tablet, a feature that could draw interest from those looking to use the
Tegra Note 7 as their primary photo-taking device, rather than a smartphone or
a standalone camera.

Aside from its speedy processor and budget-friendly price,
NVIDIA is focused on showing off the power of its stylus device. In an
elaborate demonstration video, NVIDIA compares the sensitivity and accuracy of
its DirectStylus device with the stylus options available for the Nexus 7 and
the Galaxy Note 8.

As of Tuesday, e-retailer Newegg had the Tegra Note 7 available for pre-order. It will officially go on sale starting Nov. 19.